Department of Civil Engineering, City University of New York (City College), New York, NY, 10031, USA.
Columbia Water Center, Columbia University, New York, NY, 10027, USA.
Nat Commun. 2022 Jun 13;13(1):3374. doi: 10.1038/s41467-022-31122-9.
Significant groundwater depletion in regions where grains are procured for public distribution is a primary sustainability challenge in India. We identify specific changes in the Indian Government's Procurement & Distribution System as a primary solution lever. Irrigation, using groundwater, facilitated by subsidized electricity, is seen as vital for meeting India's food security goals. Using over a century of daily climate data and recent spatially detailed economic, crop yield, and related parameters, we use an optimization model to show that by shifting the geographies where crops are procured from and grown, the government's procurement targets could be met on average even without irrigation, while increasing net farm income and arresting groundwater depletion. Allowing irrigation increases the average net farm income by 30%. The associated reduction in electricity subsidies in areas with significant groundwater depletion can help offset the needed spatial re-distribution of farm income, a key political obstacle to changes in the procurement system.
在印度,为公共分配而采购谷物的地区出现大量地下水枯竭,这是一个主要的可持续性挑战。我们认为,印度政府的采购和分配系统的具体变化是主要的解决方案杠杆。地下水灌溉利用补贴电力,被视为实现印度粮食安全目标的关键。利用一个多世纪的每日气候数据和最近的详细空间经济、作物产量和相关参数,我们使用优化模型表明,通过改变采购和种植作物的地理区域,即使没有灌溉,政府的采购目标也可以平均实现,同时增加净农业收入并阻止地下水枯竭。允许灌溉将使平均净农业收入增加 30%。在地下水枯竭严重的地区减少电力补贴,可以帮助抵消对采购系统进行改革所面临的关键政治障碍——即农业收入在空间上的重新分配。